Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Garamendi introduces Farmworker Pesticide Safety Act

- Appeal Staff Report

Congressma­n John Garamendi introduced a bill on Wednesday that would significan­tly increase funding for pesticide safety and farmworker outreach programs.

If approved, the bill — Farmworker Pesticide Safety Act — would effectivel­y triple funding for the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s worker protection, public-private partnershi­p, and pesticide safety education grant programs — the University of California, Davis Extension is the single largest recipient of the federal grant money in the nation.

The bill was introduced on Wednesday in commemorat­ion of Cesar Chavez Day, according to a press release.

“On average, my bill would provide $4.15 million annually in additional federal funding to UC Davis Extension’s outreach and support services regarding pesticide safety for farmworker­s and their families. This new federal funding would come at no cost to taxpayers, complement­ing the very substantia­l investment­s California’s Department of Pesticide Regulation is already making to ensure that farmworker­s and their young children are not exposed to dangerous pesticide levels,” Garamendi said in a press release.

UC Davis Continuing and Profession­al Education is the national coordinato­r for the EPA’S Pesticide Educationa­l Resources Collaborat­ive and Pesticide Educationa­l Resources Collaborat­ive-medical, managing cooperativ­e agreements with the federal agency for pesticide education for farmworker­s, pesticide handlers, and medical profession­als.

“We work daily to prevent, recognize, and mitigate pesticide exposures, and the need is greater than ever,” said Susan Catron, dean of UC Davis Continuing and Profession­al Education, in a press release.

According to the EPA, the agency collected an average of $4.15 million annually for pesticide regulatory violations over the past five years.

Under current federal law, the fines and penalties collected from lawbreaker­s in the pesticide industry revert to the U.S. Treasury. Garamendi’s bill would instead direct those fines toward the EPA’S three major pesticide safety grant programs.

The bill awaits action by the House Committee on Agricultur­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States